Weddings

Sofia Nebiolo Wore The Row to Her Intimate City Hall Wedding in Paris

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Photo: Marcelo Gomes

So on a surprisingly bright, blue-sky November morning, Nebiolo and Victoor were joined by 10 friends—all wearing the white masks that had been embroidered by Kaori Konishikawa for the occasion—at the mayor’s office in the 11th arrondissement. (“At first we were told that we could have only six guests,” Nebiolo recalls. “We jumped for joy that we could enlarge our tiny little party a bit!”) There, the stylist Sarah de Mavaleix surprised Nebiolo with a Charvet scarf–wrapped bouquet of anemones from Castor Fleuriste. Meanwhile, the print designer Hélène Lauth had arranged the recording of the event for the couple’s families, and the photographer Marcelo Gomes snapped away. “We were the only wedding that day and had the entire place to ourselves,” says Nebiolo, who had treated herself the day before to an Elaine Huntzinger facial (complete with crystals and acupuncture). To complete the look, Nebiolo turned to a handful of Westman Atelier pigment sticks for a “fresh and bright” look, while the hairstylist Rishi Jokhoo masterminded her low chignon.

After the ceremony, the group of 12 sauntered over to Nebiolo and Victoor’s apartment, where they were met with rapid at-home COVID tests. With negative results in hand, their close friend, Vivant chef Pierre Touitou, then prepared a meal of sweet potatoes and cream topped with salmon roe, followed by a delicate risotto, which they ate at a long table decorated with more anemones, Astier de Villatte ceramic plates, and Citta di Kyoto candles from Santa Maria de Novella. “We drank natural wine and danced to a playlist created by Basile Khadiry of Beige Habilleur with the windows open, celebrating the unusually brisk weather and our fresh nuptials,” Nebiolo says.

Near the end of the afternoon, the newlyweds cut into their dessert, a “Mazel Tov” Jean-Paul Hévin cheesecake, which had been sugar-dusted with their initials. And “because two cakes are always better than one,” Nebiolo says with a laugh, they also served a traditional-style religieuse pastry from Stohrer, the oldest patisserie in Paris.

“We were definitely anticipating a different wedding, and it was not at all what I’d envisioned,” Nebiolo concedes, emphasizing how difficult it was to be separated from their loved ones, who live far and wide. And yet, many of them were there in spirit, having sent messages, bouquets, and bottles; one friend in Germany had even overnighted cinnamon rolls for them to enjoy on their first married morning. “At the end of the day, I’m so happy that we really made something beautiful out of it. There were little notes of everything”—and everyone—“that we loved.”

Below, an intimate look at Sofia Nebiolo and Christophe Victoor’s wedding.